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Annual poetry boxing tournament
Two people enter the ring, the bell goes and they start fighting it out – not with fists and blows, but with fairy tales, mini-dramas, poems. Welcome to Japan's annual poetry boxing tournament, a decade-old competition that pits opponents against each other in a ring armed with motor mouths instead of flying fists.
Currently, regional heats are under way in the sport that Katsunori Kusunoki dreamed up to combat the shyness and reluctance to participate that he has increasingly noticed in his students at Kanto Gakuin University.
"In Japan, young people especially find it very hard to communicate or express themselves, so I wanted to give them an opportunity to find their voices," the Telegraph quoted him, as saying.
"Japan has a long tradition of poetry and I thought that it would be more interesting to turn the event into a 'battle' in a ring," he added. The next series of bouts are scheduled for June 7 in Yokohama, with 200 verbal combatants vying to move on to regional finals and, eventually, the national finals in November. Fights pit two boxers against each other, reading their own poems inside a ring complete with red and blue corners.
The subject matter varies wildly - from politics through critiques of celebrities, food and the unfairness of life as a student - and after each boxer's three minutes are up a seven-strong panel of judges votes on the winner. Combatants are permitted to use props, but those that score the highest rely on their words, voice and delivery, Kusunoki said.
In
the
final
round
of
a
tournament,
the
remaining
contestants
are
required
to
improvise
a
poem
thrown
at
them
by
one
of
the
judges.
The
first
winner
of
the
Poetry
Boxing
Lightweight
division,
Mariko
Wakabayashi,
17,
thought
up
a
poem
incorporating
the
word
"butter"
in
a
matter
of
moments.
The
competitors
come
from
all
walks
of
Japanese
life
and
all
age
groups.



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